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  • 1995 Second Street opens its doors

    It is wonderful to revisit the first days of the the Lizzie Borden B&B via Youtube, only weeks after it opened on August 4, 1995. All of the original staff are there including George Quigley, brother of present cook, Dave Quigley, owners Ron Evans and Martha McGinn, and day manager Rochelle Pettenuti who painted the portraits of the Borden clan which still hang in the rooms on the second and third floor. It was Ron Evans who had the vision and passion to open the house to the public as a museum and bed and breakfast. Sadly, he lived only a very short time afterward and would not know how very successful his dream would become. The house had just been repainted in a tan and brown color scheme, and furnished as closely as possible to the house as it was in 1892.

  • Happy Birthday Mr. Poe

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    This Saturday will mark the 199th birthday of Edgar Allan Poe. So-what does this have to do with Lizzie Borden?  Not much actually, except for that Poe is widely regarded as the Father of Detective Fiction and the master of the whodunnit and how. Detective fiction is widely considered to have begun in 1841 with the publication of “The Murders in the Rue Morgue”, a short story by Edgar Allan Poe featuring “the first fictional detective, the eccentric and brilliant C. Auguste Dupin.  Many authors followed after Poe’s distinctive style including Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and Agatha Christie to name the two best-selling authors of the genre.  Lizzie Borden would surely have read Poe’s works.

    The city of Baltimore tries to lay claim to the genius, but Poe was actually born in Boston, Massachusetts and led a short but dramatic life. His actual cause of death is uncertain, but 40 years of not taking very good care of his health took a toll in the end- that and his deep sorrow at losing his young wife to consumption just two years before he died in 1849. 

    The Poe House in Baltimore observes the birthday every year with plays, toasts,  readings of Poe’s works, and the famous Poe Toaster- a mystery man who slips into the cemetery on Greene Street with three roses and a bottle of cognac and leaves them on Poe’s grave in the dead of night.  His identity is a secret well-guarded by the curator of Poe House.

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    One can only wonder what Poe would have thought about the Borden Case- he may have been inspired to write a short story about it!  Poe was no stranger to the Fall River-Providence area as two years before his death he went wife-hunting again and his eye rested upon a Providence lady, whose parents forbade the marriage due to Poe’s reputation.  Interesting to think of Poe strolling by that house on Second Street which did exist in 1845!  http://www.eapoe.org/index.htm

    Lizzie was as silent and cryptic in court as that famous bird in Poe’s most beloved work.

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    “Nevermore!”

  • Through the Eyes of a Killer

     

    Slide Album: Through the eyes of a killer

    On the morning of August 4th, the side screen door may have been unlatched for as much as an hour.  With the front door and cellar door locked, the only way an intruder could have entered #92 Second Street was by way of the side screen door on the north side of the house which was left unlatched when the maid went out to wash windows at about 9:15 a.m.  If one is to believe Lizzie Borden, her bedroom door and dress closet was locked that morning, as was the communicating door between Lizzie’s room and that of her parents on the second floor.  That leaves the only route to the front guestroom where Abby Borden was found dead to follow a pattern beginning at the side door, kitchen, diningroom, sitting room and front hall and up the front staircase.  The killer’s escape path would have followed the same way in reverse, and then to some place of hiding to await Mr. Borden’s arrival some time later.  Naturally the questions arise : 1.  Why did a murderer intent on killing Mr. Borden also kill Abby? 2. How did the killer know the side door would be unlocked? And most puzzling of all, 3. Why did the killer remain in the house after not finding Mr. Borden at home, and then murdering Abby Borden? 4. Where did he hide during the interval between the two homicides? Most would agree the assailant was lucky to have chosen the time and manner so perfectly as to have avoided all of the inmates of the house between 9:15 and 11 a.m. that morning, and to have chosen a day when Emma Borden was out of town and the maid would be out washing windows. That is, unless you believe it was an “inside job”!

  • Crossword puzzle solution

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    Mutton Eaters Challenge Crossword Puzzle  Down 1. Street where Alice Russell lived 2. Prosecutor’s first name 3. Street where #22 across lived 5. Middle name of Lizzie’s middle sister 6. Little Abbie Whitehead’s husband 8. Mr. Almy’s spouse 9. Lizzie’s Maplecroft friend 12. Lurana’s spouse 14. City where Lizzie was held 10 months 17. One of the banks where Andrew did business 19. A clerk pharmacist at Smith’s 21. Name of butcher with whom Morse stayed 23. Address of former Borden home 

    Across 3. A detective agency 4. Tried to hop over the Borden’s back fence 7. Affiliation of Lizzie’s Rock Street church 10. Abby’s sister’s married name 11. Andrew’s “last client” on August 4th  13. Block of shops across the street from City Hall  15. County where Bridget was born  16. Was served at breakfast  18. Type of cornmeal cakes  20. Bordens’ funeral director  22. Family which hosted post-acquittal party in Fall River  24. Town where Borden farms were located  25. Dr. Bowen’s first name  26. Popular name for irons  27. Editor of The Hatchet

  • The Eve of All Hallows

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    No full moon tonight over #92 Second Street.  This was taken on October 27th over the barn in the back yard.  But it will be creepy enough with ten brave guests spending the night at the scene of the crime.  After a tour of Oak Grove, hot cider and doughnuts, a tour of the house will begin at 8, interrupted by a few fearless trick-or treaters.  There may even be a seance at midnight, just in case anyone “on the other side” wishes to leave us a clue.  Happy Halloween!

  • Gone Sleuthing!

     tall_lady_clear.gif   Warps and Wefts will return on

                        Monday, September 24th .

                                                                                    

  • Halloween must be coming

    The upscale catalogue, Victorian Trading Company http://www.victoriantradingco.com/index.html is offering one of the nicest Lizzie Borden costumes on the market, complete with large axe and a cunning little hat.  The calico two-piece ensemble is well-made and makes some of the other Lizzie costumes look- well, tawdry in comparison.  This little number would be perfectly in style for those hot August mornings as well.  Victorian Trading Co. offers thousands of Victorian-inspired home decor, holiday, fashion, and stationery items.

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    This notoriously wicked woman is accessorized with the weapon that wiped out her unfortunate family in forty whacks.  Includes: Authentic Victorian day dress in a mustard print featuring exaggerated poufed sleeves on the shirtwaist with antiqued metal buttons and pleated skirt back, authentic hat design with elastic chin strap and long netted veil, and of course, her trusty axe.
    #i12092  $149.95
  • Collecting Lizzie

    With the high prices realized this past year for some of Lizzie’s Maplecroft library books, what’s left to the average collector which is affordable?  Ephemera, or collectibles made of paper, can often be the answer to owning a bit of Bordenia.  The cardboard fan with tassel has become a popular ebay item in recent years and is still affordable.  This was a dainty souvenir produced for the  world premiere of Slaughter on Second Street at the Bristol Community College  Conference in 1992.  When in doubt – keep everything!

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    The playbill for the evening (click on images for larger size)playbill3.jpg  playbill4.jpg

  • The Borden Alphabet

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    A   was the August the murders took place,

    B   Bordens murdered by blows to head and face.

    C   was the Crime in all its detail,

    D   was the Daughter at once put in jail.

    E   was the Evidence not in her favor,

    F   was the Few little facts that might save her.

    G   was the Gown all covered with paint,

    H   doubtless the Hatchet, tho’some said “it ain’t”.

    I   was the Inquest they held all in vain,

    J   was the Jury who ‘most went insane.

    K   was the Kind of a woman she was,

    L   was the Lawyer, who pleaded her cause.

    M  for Money the motive was plain,

    N   surely the Note they searched for in vain.

    O   was the Officers of the police,

    P   was the Pardon and speedy release.

    Q   were the Queries and Questions each day,

    R   was Alice Russell who gave her away.

    S   was the Sentence, oh how did she fear it!

    T   was the Ten months she waited to hear it.

    U   is the Unfinished story it makes,

    V   is the Villainous interest one takes.

    W  for WHO it is nothing explains,

    X   the Unknown who forever remains.

    Y   would still bother us if we would let it,

    Z   is our Zeal as we try to forget it.

  • Cornelia Otis Skinner- At Rest in Oak Grove

    otis.jpgChances are slim today that the name of Otis Skinner or his daughter Cornelia would ring any bells except in the minds of students of the theatre.  Otis Skinner, who enjoyed a successful career spanning fifty years, worked with the greats of the Charles Frohman stable of stars, the Immortal Madame Modjeska, and Edwin Booth, brother of the infamous John Wilkes Booth.  


    Begining his work as a clerk, by age 18 he was begging his clergyman father for a theatre career.  None other than P.T. Barnum. who knew the Skinners when they lived in Hartford, encouraged and supported Otis’ talent and potential for the stage. He is most remembered as a Shakespearian actor and for his great performance as the beggar in Kismet. He was a genial, gentle, friendly man- and much-loved by adoring fans.

     Cornelia was born into the business in Chicago in 1899 and debuted in her father’s acting company in 1921. The rest is history.  Cornelia inherited her father’s acting and writing genes and made her mark not only on the stage but in films, television, Broadway, and literary circles.  She wrote for the New Yorker, and wrote, produced and starred in one-woman monologues based on famous and powerful women in history.  Her amusing novel travelogue When We Were Young And Gay was made into a successful Broadway play. The International Movie Data Base includes Cornelia’s filmography as follows by date:

    corny.jpgskinner.jpg

    1. The Swimmer (1968) [Actress …. Mrs. Hammar]
    2. The Pleasure of His Company (1961) [Writer] (play)
    3. “This Is Your Life: Charlie Ruggles” (1959) TV Episode [Actress …. Herself]
    4. “What’s My Line?: (1959-03-29)” (1959) TV Episode [Actress …. Herself – Mystery Guest]
    5. “What’s It For: (1957-10-12)” (1957) TV Episode [Self]
    6. “The Alcoa Hour: Merry Christmas, Mr. Baxter (#2.5)” (1956) TV Episode [Actress …. Susan Baxter]
    7. Max Liebman Presents: Dearest Enemy (1955) (TV) [Actress …. Mrs. Murray]
    8. The Girl in the Red Velvet Swing (1955) [Actress …. Mrs. Thaw]
    9. “Person to Person: (#2.40)” (1955) TV Episode [Actress …. Herself]
    10. “Toast of the Town: (#7.8)” (1953) TV Episode [Actress …. Herself]
    11. “Toast of the Town: (#5.32)” (1952) TV Episode [Actress …. Herself]
    12. “General Electric Guest House: (1951-07-01)” (1951) TV Episode [Actress]
    13. “Toast of the Town: (#4.14)” (1950) TV Episode [Actress …. Herself]
    14. “Toast of the Town: (#4.7)” (1950) TV Episode [Actress …. Herself]
    15. “This Is Show Business: (1950-04-30)” (1950) TV Episode [Actress …. Herself]
    16. “The Girls” (1950) TV Series [Writer] (book “Our Hearts Were Young and Gay”)
      … aka Young and Gay (original title (first two episodes title))
    17. Our Hearts Were Young and Gay (1944) [Writer] (book)
    18. The Uninvited (1944) [Actress …. Miss Holloway]
    19. Stage Door Canteen (1943) [Actress …. Herself]
    20. Kismet (1920) [Actress …. Miskah]

                         

    Cornelia married Manhattan stockbroker Alden Sanford Blodget- many thought an unlikely choice, and together they had one son.  Cornelia Otis Skinner died in New York on July 9, 1979 and was buried beside her husband who had predeceased her by fifteen years. The mystery seems to be why Oak Grove- and why Fall River?  R.I.P. – an amazing lady-and amazing career.

    “Women keep a special corner of their hearts for sins they have never committed.”

    “Woman’s virtue is man’s greatest invention.”  Cornelia Otis Skinner

  • That Thing on the Wall

    matchsafe.jpgabbyfloor.gifThe guestroom must be the most photographed and well-documented interior of #92.  The famous bedstead, dresser and dresser ornaments, photos on the wall, carpet and wall paper pattern are easily seen, but until 2001, the odd little blob to the left of the photo above Abby’s head was undisclosed.  Purely by accident, I found this object one day on ebay and learned it is a match safe. One side holds new matches, the other side holds used matches, with the striker in the middle.  These items came in all sorts of designs and materials. The one in the 1892 photo appears to be of wood.  The match safe is at a fairly low height which may be because Abby was a short woman.  Each room in the Borden home would have had one of these handy household conveniences as Andrew Borden used only candle and kerosene to light his house.  The little platforms on the sides of the bureau mirror and frequently seen on the ends of the high headboard were to hold a candle or small lamp-which made reading one’s Bible easy in bed!  Today there is a brass match safe in place which resembles the one of many years ago.

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  • Maplecroft. Mansion of Mystery

    For half of her life, Lizzie A. Borden lived in modest homes in the unfashionable south end of the city. For the other half, she lived a life of quiet luxury on the Hill section in the north end of town in a dream house of her own taste and furnishing. The trip to Maplecroft is the pilgrimage all true Borden scholars must make. Briefly a B&B back in the 1990’s, no house in the city is surrounded by more mystery, because photographs, even in its public days, were forbidden inside. For all who want to understand Lizzie, the desire to see what is left of her gilded cage on French Street is a heart’s burning desire. Perhaps the fact that the house is closed to inquiring eyes makes knowledge of her private palace even more desirable.

    As the house was not built for Lizzie and Emma, – they took occupancy in September 1893 – it would be nearly impossible to say with any certainty just how much of the interior furnishings such as woodwork, fireplace mantels, built-ins, etc. are Lizzie’s taste, and how much were the previous owner’s. Some things are known to be Lizzie’s additions, such as the back bedroom over the kitchen, the stone chimney, the back yard granite block wall, – and perhaps the mantel in her library with her favorite hymn and Scottish thistles, At Home in My Ain Countrie. Of course there is always just the chance that the mantel was there first, and inspired her love of the hymn after. We may never know. 

                                                                (c) S. Dziedzic1992

                                                              (c) S. Dziedzic 1992

    One mantel in particular has captured the imagination of Bordeniaphiles for years however- the second floor front mantel with this verse:

    And old time friends and twilight plays
    And starry nights and sunny days.
    Come trooping up the misty ways
    When my fires burn low.

    Whether this room which faces French Street on the front second floor of the house was a bedroom or reception room is unsure, but the verse in the mantel invokes a deep sense of wistfulness as one contemplates how it may have held great significance for Lizzie’s solitary life after Emma departed Maplecroft in 1905. For the loyal handful of friends who braved the criticism of Fall River high society, and called upon Lizzie there, theirs must have been a warm welcome. These were the “old time friends” who drew near when Lizzie’s “fire burned low”. The poem is surrounded by clusters of clover leaves, tokens of good fortune. The message of the mantel is not lost upon those who care to look.

    The mantel today is no longer in its old familiar place. It has been replaced by one of marble. Eighty years ago a frail woman sat by this mantel perhaps thinking over her life and all the secrets locked away within the walls of Maplecroft. If places retain the resonance of those who have dwelt within them, surely Maplecroft holds dark secrets and mysteries still.

                                                         c) S. Dziedzic 2006

                                                                      Click on photographs for enlarged image
                                                        (c) S. Dziedzic 1992

                                                                      


                                                                        

  • On the Old Fall River Line

    After the great mills and textile industry, the old Fall River Line’s  luxurious Floating Palaces should be the next thing Fall River should be remembered for (although many might say Lizzie Borden). The steamboats plied the south coast of New England from Fall River to New York with connecting rail service to Boston from 1847 to 1937.

      The famous upbeat song, On the Old Fall River Line was written by prolific Tin Pan Alley Composer Harry Von Tilzer(1872- 1946) whose most well-know hit is probably She’s Only a Bird in a Gilded Cage, written in 1900. 

    No trip to Fall River would be complete without a trip to the Marine Museum at Battleship Cove, which houses an incredible display of luxury Fall River Line appointments,- from china to crew uniforms and parlor chairs, carved paneling, to newel posts from the grand staircases.  The museum also boasts a 28 foot model of the Titanic from the movie of the same name starring Clifton Webb and Barbara Stanwyck, and a fantastic display of artifacts from the sunken Italian liner, the Andrea Doria.  Be sure to plan some time to visit Battleship Cove and see what’s left of the old Fall River Line pier.

                 

  • Fall River Public Library- A Visual Feast

  • July 19th, 1860 Happy 147th Miss Lizzie!

    anniv-09.giffaceof-lizzie.jpgWho else shares the day?

    1834 Edgar Degas France, impressionist painter 
    1851 Hendrik J Jut Dutch murderer (head of Jut)
    1865 Charles Horace Mayo surgeon/co-founder (Mayo Clinic)
    1896 Archibald J Cronin England, author (Citadel, Shining Victory)
    1937 George Hamilton IV NC, actor (Evel Knievel, Love at 1st Bite)
    1938 Richard Jordan NYC, actor (Dune, Old Boyfriends, Interiors)
    and Vikki Carr [Florencia Casillas], El Paso Tx, singer (Let it Be Him)
    1947 Bernie Leadon Minneapolis, guitarist/vocalist (Eagles-Take it Easy)
    and Brian May London, rock guitarist (Queen-We are the Champions)
    1952 Alan Collins rock guitarist (Lynyrd Skynyrd)
    and Dominic Muldowney composer
    and Howard Donald Saunders Danbury Ct, murderer (FBI Most Wanted List)
    1954 Kathleen Turner actress (Accidental Tourist, Jewel of Nile)
    1962 Anthony Edwards Santa Barbara Calif, actor (It Takes Two, ER)

    Things to Remember for July 19:
         Baked Beans-Hot Dog-Ice Cream-Hitch Hiking Month
         Flowers-water lily & larkspur         Gem-ruby
         Park & Recreation Month-National Picnic Month
      2 Days Astrological sign:  Cancer

    Highlights in History Which Occur July 19:
      64 Circus Maximus in Rome catches fire
    1524 Boer war begins in Germany
    1545 King Henry VIII’s flagship Mary Rose sinks at Portsmouth; 73 die
    1553 15-year-old Lady Jane Grey deposed as England’s Queen after 9 days
    1836 HMS Beagle/Charles Darwin reaches Ascension
    1848 1st women’s rights convention (Seneca Falls, NY)
    1850 Airship Elizabeth leaves in storm for Fire Island, crashes (42 die)
    1860 1st railroad reaches Kansas
    1862 Forrest’s 1st raid
    1863 Battle of Buffington’s Island, OH
    1864 Battle of Winchester, VA (Stephenson’s Depot
    1870 France declares war on Prussia; Franco-Prussian war begins
    1918 German armies retreat across Marne River in France (WW I)
    1940 Hitler advises Great Britain to surrenders
    1957 1st rocket with nuclear warhead fired, Yucca Flat, Nevada
    1961 1st in-flight movie shown (TWA)
    1965 Shooting begins on Star Trek 2nd pilot “Where No Man Has Gone Before”
    1966 50 year old Frank Sinatra marries 21 year old Mia Farrow in Las Vegas
    and France performs nuclear test at Fangataufa Island
    and Gov James Rhodes declares state of emergency in Cleveland (race riot)
    1967 1st air conditioned NYC subway car (R-38 on the F line)
    and Race riots in Durham NC
    and US launches Explorer 35 for lunar orbit (800/7400 km)
    1969 Apollo 11 goes into Moon orbit
     and Don Bowden becomes 1st American to break 4 minute mile (3m58s7)
    and US performs nuclear test at Nevada Test Site
    1977 Floods in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, kills 76
    1985 Christa McAuliffe chosen 1st school teacher to fly space shuttle
    and Dam in Fiemme Valley Italy bursts; 200 die
    1990 BASF plant in Cincinnati explodes in flames, 1 dies
    and Cincinnati Red Pete Rose is sentence to 5 months for tax evasion
    and Richard Nixon library opens in Yorba Linda, Calif
    1992 NYC Ballet star Peter Martins, arrested for beating his wife
    1993 Pres Clinton fires FBI director William Sessions
    1994 1st game ever cancelled at Seattle Kingdome (falling tiles)
    and Bomb explosion in Alas Airlines at Colon Panama, 21 killed